GERMAN UNITY See Page 4 Y Alit uyr A6F 4 lp 445ppl- lqv wr t tly OWWWM FAIR. AND WN"ARMER VOL. LVI, No. 156 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5, 1946 PRICE FIVE CENTS wml Senate To Act On Extending Draft'Today Teen-AehId uction Amendment Is Passed By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, June 4-The Senate brought a teen-age inducting, pay-increasing draft bill up to the brink of final action tonight only to halt work abruptly till tomorrow. Democratic Leader Barkley (Ky.) explained that several hours might be required to dispose of a substitute proposal by Senater Revercomb (Rep. W. Va.) to continue Selective Service authority until May 15; 1947 but sus- pend all inductions until Congress ordered otherwise. Final Vote Withheld The Senate already had voted 53 to 26 to make 18 and 19 year olds - now temporarily exempted - subject to call and had approved pay hikes for enlisted men when Senator Gur- ney (Rep., S.D.), in charge of the bill, announced that it seemed im- possible to get a final vote within a reasonable time. Senator Maybank (Dem., S.C.) pro- tested vigorously against any delay, forcing a series of quorum calls. Barkley finally moved to recess the Senate until 11 a.m. tomorrow and was sustained on a 45 to 17 roll call vote. On a standing vote, the Senate ac- cepted an amendment by Senator Magnuson (Dem., Wash) which would give special deferments to sci- entific students in accredited schools. The pay boost, proposed by Sena- tors LaFollette (Prog., Wis.) and Johnson (Dem., Col.) to spur volun- tary enlistments. Would Boost Service Pay Pay of privates would be boosted from $50 a month to $75; privates first class from $54 to $80; corporals from $66 to $90; and sergeants from $78 to $100. Corresponding increases would be paid to marines and sailors. These same increases had been vot- ed by the House along with increases ranging from 10 to 20 per cent for other non-commissioned and for com- missioned officers. The Senate, however, passed up the question of pay raises for commis- sioned officers and adopted a lower scale of monthly pay boosts for staff, technical and master sergeants and equivalent ranks in other services. Flour Shortage To Ease Soon, Millers Claim Wheat Crop Greater Than Was Expected CHICAGO, June 4 --(')- The na- tion has struck "bottom" in the cur- rent domestic flour shortage, the Millers National Federation said to- Breadless Thursday? DETROIT, June 4-'P)-The Ma- yor's Emergency Food Committee today studied a proposal that De- troit have "breadless Thursdays" as a means of conserving the area's dwindling wheat supplies. day, and a gradual easing of the critical bread shortage may start in two or three weeks. 'There were two signs the nation's worst bread shortage will soon be on the wane. They were: 1. The new spring wheat crop. which has started coming in in Texas and Oklahoma, is running 2 percent tbove pre-harvest expectations. 2. The Department of Agriculture drafted a plan for dipping into for- eign relief wheat stocks to relieve conditions in the most acute bread shortage areas in the country. Herman Steen, Executive Secretary of the Millers National Federation, said "this is the worst week the mill- ers will have." Between 80 and 90 percent of the nation's flour mills will shut down because of lack of wheat to grind into flour, he said. Policeman Dies After Accident Officer Kenneth E. Payne, 31, of the Ann Arbor Police, died last night in University Hospital after an ac- cident yesterday afternoon when his motorcycle ran off the road and struck a utility pole on US-23 (Wash- tenaw and Sheridan Drive). Payne died at 9:15 p.m. without regaining consciousness. He had suf- fered a fractured skull and punctured Russian Ideas Are Great Obstacle To European Peace, Bevin Says; UN arned Against ustingSpain SCHOOL FOR CRIME?-This is the Washtenaw County Juvenile De- tention Home where hapless children spend an average of two weeks behind iron bars awaiting trial. BEHIND IRON BARS: Kids Are 'Criminals at County Detention Hm Children Await Trial Without recreationi Or Exercise, Locked in Narrow RooIns By CLAYTON DICKEY and MILT FIEUDENIHEIM Is a boy who runs away from home a criminal? Behind a barred window in a narrow, locked room at the Washtenaw County Juvenile Detention Home, a small, tousle-headed boy faces two weeks of solitary confinement while an antiquated youth correction system decides his fate by rule of thumb. Two Daily reporters saw this boy while investigating the local juve- nile correction situation. The Detention Home is located at the Washtenaw County Home on U.S. Highway 23 one mile from Ann Arbor. Every year 60 to 70 children spend v an average of two weeks there--in three bare rooms that accommodatej a maximum of six youngsters. The Detention Home is a small basement corner of the county in- firmary and is separated from the; rest of the building by locked gates.9 The children-unless they are "trustics" -are locked in their1 rooms at all times. Meals are served to. them through panels in the doors. The panels are locked when. not in use. An attempt has been made to brighten the rooms with light blue paint. But there are no pictures on the walls-only newspaper cutouts of Jesus Christ. There are no rugs or curtains, no reading lamps or comfortable chairs.1 Only a box of second hand books1 is provided to break the lonely mon- otony-. According to a study made by the National Probation Associa- tion, "children cannot live in a vacuum. There must be a pro- gram, not only to keep them busy and constructively occupied, but also to enable them to work out their tensions in action, and to give the juvenile court an oppor- tunity to study andadvise them." But a child confined in the Wash- tenaw County Juvenile Detention Hore has no constructive supervi- sion from the local probate court or from other sources. His stay in the home is a complete blank from the point of view of both recreation and rehabilitation. Children who are placed in the Detention Home are under the Juris- diction of Julia Dernaree, a "prac- tical" nurse, with no special train- ing in child psychology. Mrs. Ina G. Kennett, wife of the of World News Italiani Votes Counted . ROME, June 4-(P)-The middle- of-the-road Christian Democratic party rolled up a commanding lead of more than 2,1)00,000 votes over each of its two nearest rivals - the Communists and Socialists-tonight, a tabulation of two-thirds of the ballots cast for an Italian Constitu- ent Assembly showed. FrenchP arties Sent . . PARIS, June 4 --() - France's three major political parties main- tained silence tonight on the ques- tion of who will head the new gov- ernment, but impartial observers believed a socialist would be chosen. There appeared little likelihood that the victorious Popular Repub- lican Movement party (MRP)), which emerged from Sunday's elec- tion as France's strongest, would insist upon the presidency for for- eign minister Georges Bidault. * + superintendent of the County In- firmary, is responsible for the chil- dren. Records kept of the youngsters indicate only such statistical data as their entry and departure dates, age, height and weight. No attempt is made to give scientific aid to the child in solving the problem which brought him under the aegis of the law. The National Probation Associa- tion emphasizes that the super- intendent of a detention home "must be a highly qualified and trained person," whose job must not be "confused or combined with that of the probation officer for it is a full-time, exacting posi- tion." The Probation Associa tion lists thme e qualifications for the superin- telident of a detention home: "a col- lege graduate who has had special training in psychology, education See KIDS, Page 2 Provost Adams Outlines Role 0 the Tea cher Because capacity for understand- ing is essential for peace, it is the special function of the teacher to instill that understanding in his stu- dents, Provost James P. Adams de- clared yesterday at the 11th Annual School of Education Convocation honoring candidates for the teacher's certificate. "Teachers are architects of under- standing," he said. Speaking on "The Enduring Affir- matives", Provost Adams emphasized faith, idealism, liberality of mind and spirit, and enthusiasm for work. Ethel Wooden, principal of Whit- ney Vocational School in Toledo, re- ceived the Cleo Murtland Scholar- ship Award intended to stimulate in- terest in superior teaching, creative writing and significant research in the field of vocational education. The William H. Payne Scholar Award was given to David M. Nelson, and Earl E. Mosier received the Burke Aaron Hinsdale Scholar Award, both of which are in recognition of high scholarship and high rank in profes- sional zeal and promise. Nelson is a candidate for a Master's degree while Mosier is a candidate for a Ph. D. degree. NO Armamenlt, Atom Controls Seen as Result Sub-Coniuittee Finds No German Research - By The Associated Press NEW YORK. June 4-The exclu- sion of Franco Spain from the United Nations makes effective control of atomic energy and armaments im- possible, the U.N. sub-committee in- vestigating Spain declared today. It recommended that Spain be con- sidered for membership in the United Nations if Generalissimo Francisco Franco were removed. Calls for Action The sub-committee, which called for General Assembly action against the Falangist regime in its report to the Security Council, made the atomic-armament statement in a supplement stressing a weakness of the U.N. security system. "Geographically, Spain is a nation of importance with respect to the organization of the security system of the United Nations," the report said. Control Impossible "The exclusion of the Franco re- gime from the United Nations would leave Spain outside of any interna- tional arrangements relating to the maintenance of internatioal peace and security in that region and render impossible a really effective system of international control of atomic energy and the relating scientific in- formation and raw materials or regu- lation of armaments, as envisaged by the United Nations." "Gap" in Lineup In commenting on the "gap" in the security lineup, Dr. Herbert V. Evatt, sub-committee chairman and Australian delegate to the Council, said however, that the sub-commit- tee had found no evidence to sup- port contentions that German sci- entists were at work on atomic energy within Spain. The report to the Security Coun- cil, which meets at 3 p.m. (EDT) Thursday, recommended that the Assembly be asked to call for world- wide severance of relations with Spain if Franco was still in power at the time of the Assembly's September meeting here. The Franco government assailed the sub-committee report as "an ob- vious intervention in the internal affairs" of Spain, and said it was "not a report" but a "verdict" violat- ing the principles of the Atlantic Charter, the Dumbarton Oaks agree- ment, and the United Nations Char- ter Plea Made for OPA Survival More than 150 residents of Ann Arbor and Washtenaw County jam- med the County Court House yester- day to hear pleas from five citizens that the powers of the OPA be con- tinued At the meeting, which was spon- sored by the "Facts For Action Com- mittee" of Washtenaw County, a Re- publican nominee for Congress, a Democratic nominee, a Communist Party leader, a housewife and an OPA chief joined together in support of price control. The program was moderated by Rev. Redman of Ann Arbor, and included talks by H. F. Vander Velde, Abner Berry, Mrs. George Ross, Wayne Saari and Hicks Griffiths. Aeronautical Research Study To Start July 1 Aeronautical research will start at the Willow Run Airport by July 1, and classes will be held there by the department of Aeronautical Engi- neering during the summer session,; Prof. Emerson W. Conlon, chairman of that department announced yester- day. "Research in the various phases of aeronautics which will be carried on at Willow Run will enable us to acquire laboratory equipment which we could not otherwise obtain be- cause of budgetary limitations," Prof. Conlon said. "Income from this re- search, which employs many grad- uate students, is adequate to support their families, and much of this re- search is applicable to the theses required for advanced degrees." According to Prof. Conlon the ac- quisition of Willow Run Airport by the University establishes a cycle of research, instruction and graduate study which should advance the sci- ence of aeronautics directly through research and indirectly by producing better trained engineers. The Department of Chemical En- gineering also plans to do research work at Willow Run. High pressure experiments may be conducted out there, Prof, George D. Brown, chair- man of the Department of Chemical and Metallurgical Engineering, said. Lubricants may be tested and re- search work for various companies done out there. A test cell to test aircraft engines will be set up out at Willow Run by the Mechanical Engineering depart- ment, according to Prof. Ransom S. Hawley, chairman of that depart- ment. Automobile road tests may aso be conducted out there. Annual Spring Concert To Be Held Tomorrow The Women's Glee Club under the direction of Miss Marguerite Hood will present its annual spring con- cert at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in Hill Auditorium. The first half of the concert will consist of a group of short formal selections. Included will be songs from the Liebeslieder by Brahms. Two harps and two horns will ac- company one of the numbers. Lynn Palmer and Margaret Wardle will be the harpists, and the horn players will be Carla Hemsing and Ann Lawrence. Soloists will be Lennis Britton, Jean Thalner, and Suzanne Smith. Rose Derderian, mezzi-soprano, will also offer two selections, "In the Silence of Night" by Rachmaninoff and "La Danza" by Rossini. A "Latin American Fiesta" will be the theme of the second half of the program. The Women's Glee Club and the Navy Choir, reinforced by other male singers on campus, will sing a group of Latin American songs first separately and then together, accompanied by Latin American in- struments. Suzanne Smith will be the soloist with one of the numbers, and a trio made up of Rose Derder- ian, Jean Thalner, and Lennis Brit- ton will also sing. Beverly Solorow will be the accompanist for the con- cert. Classes Start at Airport; Others To Follow Soon Students Inspect Field, Make Surface Tests Wasting no time in making use of its new airfield for educational purposes, the University held its first class in airport design at Willow1 Run Airport yesterday. Hardly more than 24 hours had passed since the University took over4 the airport when a group of 15 senior and graduate students in the De- partment of Civil Engineering and several representatives of the Michi- gan State Highway laboratory went out to inspect the runways and the layout of the surface drainage sys-J tem at Willow Run.a Under the supervision of Prof. William S. Housel of the Department1 of Civil Engineering, this group checked soil profiles at the airfield to estimate the amount of surface runoff as compared to infiltration in-.a to the permeable soil. During their inspection tour they visited the con- trol tower on top of Hanger One and drove around the runways. Study Airport Design "These students have been study- ing airport design and construction all semester," Prof. Housel said, "A large part of their work has been the redesign of Willow Run, making a grading and drainage plan of the runways with emphasis on a more efficient and economical surface and subsurface drainage system" "While these students have had an opportunity to study soil conditions from information accumulated by soil surveys, Prof. Housel remarked, they have been anxious to get on the field and study it first hand. Students tak- ing this course next fall will spend perhaps one afternoon a week at Wil- low Run making soil surveys and measurements of surface and sub- surface run-off. This data will be used in the airport design courses." Field in Good Shape Commenting on the condition of the airfield after its long period of idleness, Prof. Housel said that it was in surprisingly good condition after not having maintenance for so long. It has a normal amount of deferred maintenance, lie added. "Some of the inlets for surface drainage should be lowered," Prof, Housel said. "A few minor improve- ments will probably be made over a period of time," he remarked, "Some regrading should be done so that there will be no ponding of water at or near the edge of the runways. The civil engineering department will coordinate its courses with the maintenance of, the airfield." Meet with FPHA University officials and executives of the Federal Public Housing Ad- ministration regional office in Cleve- land met yesterday to discuss Uni- versity housing problems and the possibility of securing additional space for students in Willow Village. Meanwhile, the University's request for permission to house non-veteran students in the village is pending. This request must be cleared through the Washington FPHA office. At present, quarters for 1,700 single veterans and 1,100 married veteran students are available to the Uni- versity for fall occupancy in the vil- lage. All but 700 single units are now in use by students. SCOres Molotov On Democracy, Security Stand Calls oli Soviet Union To Reconsider Pact By The Associated Press LONDON, June 4-Foreign Secre- tary Ernest Bevin declared today that Russian ideas of security and democ- racy constituted "one of the greatest obstacles to peace," and said perman- ent peace in Europe could be assur- ed "only if Russia enters freely into the European settlement." Bevin, reviewing the deadlocked Paris Foreign Ministers conference, urged the Soviet Union to reconsider its rejection of the American plan for a four-power pact to control Ger- man armaments, and to grasp that "great opportunity" before it was too late. Speaks To Commons "I say to the Soviet government that if you value peace above all f Ise, do not miss it; it may never come again," the Foreign Secretary de- clared in a speech to the House of Commons. "If we don't want to have total war we must have total peace," Bevin as- serted. Looking toward a resumption of the Four-Power talks June 15, Bevin said he proposed "to make another effort at agreement before deciding on any final alternative course." If the talks failed, he said, he would insist upon adoption of the American proposal to place the disputed Zuro- pearl treaties before a 21-nation Gen- eral Peace Conference. Replies To Molotov Replying to Soviet Foreign Mnis- ter V. M. Molotov, Bevin declared that "one of the greatest obstacles to peace" was the Soviet idea that the Russian method alone represented democracy, along with the idea that Russia could have security "only when every other country in the world has adopted the Soviet system." He vigorously denied the existence of any British-American bloc. B vin also put forth his own idea of a federation of German states, which he declared would best.fit into a long-range plan for international control, He said Britain was willing to see the Saar go to France, but that it looked upon the Ruhr Valley as a great potential for peace and raising standards of living through- out Europe. He suggested the Ruhr might become a separate province under international control, to be fitted ultimately into federal Ger- many. Intolerable Situation The Foreign Secretary, referring to the Russian attitude in the Paris Conference, said: "It is difficult for us to accept the rule of one party or one nation. It is an intolerable situation and we shall never get peace if that goes on." Bevin, opening two days of Com- mons debate on foreign policy, im- plored the United States to disre- gard Soviet rebuffs and continue seeking a Four-Power, 25-year pact to insure German demilitarization. Haber' Lectures On Vocations Emphasizes Cultural, Economic Influences The importance of a liberal educa- tion which trains people to under- stand social, cultural, and economic forces was emphasized by Prof. Wil- liam Haber of the economics depart- ment yesterday in the last of a series of lectures on vocational opportuni- ties. In describing occupational trends, Prof, Haber emphasized the decline in percentage of people employed in agriculture, and the increase in the proportion, of people employed in professional and service occupa- tions. The proportion of people who are self-employed is also declining, he said. A high standard of living can be maintained only if people displaced in manufacturing and agriculture can be absorbed into the service oc- cupations, Prof. Haber said. WE MUST BE PREPARED: Bromage Urges Extension of Draft Law By PHYLLIS KATE The strength of our armed forces "must be maintained" by extension of the Selective Service System be- yond July 1, Prof. Arthur W. Bro- mage of the political science depart- ment declared yesterday, Even in the face of the "natural tendency for people to trek back toward isolationism," Congress must taming approximately 18 million people. To make the situation "more chaotic," the central and state ad- ministrative units collapsed at the close of the war, he explained. "When I entered Bavaria last May with the military government," Prof. Bromage said, "only city and county units were functioning. There was widespread destruction due to military governors of Japan, we must also think of our own defense needs in a world "not yet really at peace," Prof. Bromage emphasized. In reference to any compromise provisions of the draft legislation, Prof. Bromage contended that such details would have to be the work of Congress, "which must make a. wise decision for the American lations that would lead to perma- nent peace, "On the other hand," he said, "we must remain prepared to carry out existing obligations and meet any military eventuality that might arise." America is "lapsing -back into iso- latior and the irresistible force of our military committments is com-